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lection Returns Still Unaccepted; enators Continue Fraud Search
Investigators Get 10-Day Extension
0
I. XLV
Los Angeles, Calif., Wednesday, May 5, 1954
No. 125
hanks Chosen Brawl aster of Ceremonies
Ken Shanks, instructor in public speaking, has been seated by the Soph-Frosh Day entertainment committee to t as master of ceremonies of the stage show Friday after-on at the Oceanhouse.
‘Ken Shanks is one of the funniest men on campus and ould really liven up the pro-am we’ve planned for Soph-sh Day,” Sally Ackles, enter-ment co-chairman said, thanks had previously acted as iter of ceremonies of the spe-“End of an Era” program ?brating the closing of Univer-Avenue.
addition to his emcee chores, mks will act as chaperone g with Harry Nelson, student vit.ies adviser, and Norman ms, instructor in economics.
?side the show there’ll be jity of other things to see and at Frosh-Soph Day,” Julius th freshman co-chairman of day, said.
tudents will be able to take ant.ige of a heated swimming 1 and a private white-sand :h. Locker facilities are avail-at no extra charge.”
■ccording to Smith, volleyball Irts and ping-pong tables are available for sports enthus-
tudents buying tickets to the t will also be entitled to free portation to and from Oce-ouse,” Dennis Hopper, sopho-e co-chairman, said.
"Te’ve arranged for a car pool set up as an added conveni-Cars will be parked at the er of 36th Street and Univer-Avenue. The procession will 'e for Oceanhouse at 12:45
or persons who drive to the ta Monica resort hotel, there be free parking in the giant immediately adjacent to the anhouse.
One more thing,” Hopper ad-
KEN SHANKS
.... funniest man
ded, “Deluxe hamburgers, hot dogs and soft drinks will be sold at wholesale prices. Prices will be so reasonable that every one should be able to afford all the food they want.”
Tickets, which sell for $1, can be purchased from any Freshman or Sophomore Council member or at the ticket booth in front of Student Union or at the door.
The IFC track preliminaries will begin at noon Friday, Dr. Tilman Hall, FRA director, announced yesterday.
The time change was made to allow sophomore and freshman athletes to compete in the Soph-Frosh “brawl.”
Swivel Hips Han to Wiggle At Hula Hop
Want to see the starting fullback of the 1953 Trojan football team do the hula?
Harold Han will demonstrate that he is just as good at swiveling his hips as snaking through the line at Friday night’s Hula Hop to be held in the Student Lounge of SU at 8 p.m.
The dance is being sponsored by the Chinese Students Club.
Casual sport attire will be appropriate to the hop.
Price of admission is 75 cents for stags, 25 cents for stagettes and $1 for couples.
Matlock Seeks Seniors to Vie For Prom Title
“Pretty women have been avoiding me all this week,” Mark Matlock sobbed, “and even my best friends won’t tell me why.” Matlock, chairman of the Senior Prom Queen Contest, has been chasing women all week but has capght only three for contestants.
“Friday is absolutely the last day women can enter,” cried Mattock, “I don’t know why I’m so unpopular. You’d think that every senior woman would want to be prom queen.”
Senior coeds whc want to help Mattock should submit a five by seven or larger photo to 215 SU by Friday.
ACGERATED DANCE STYLE
Traditional Greek Chorus Line To Be Utilized in Electra'
Even the Greeks had chorus Is. The routines were different t the basic idea was present.
audiences will realize this -en “Eiectra” opens at Bovard, y 11.
Against a musical background primitive instruments, the eek chorus moved in a dance tion which was the forerun-[r of our “modern” dance. Their iaggerated stylization was ne-~sary because of the distance :ween audience and stage. Impress Moral of Play ey served also to impress moral of the play, and their er was cdnfidant of the pro-nist, in this case, Electra. e modern playwright uses the
earing Head eaks Here
r. Thomas L. Toland. presi-of the American Hearing ety and a top authority on ing defects, will be the fea-speakcr at a Hearing luncheon today in the Foy-f Town and Gown, octor Tolan will talk on the rtance of parents watching r children for signs of loss of ing, according to S. R. Kal-~ugh, president of the Hear-Center, who is sponsoring the heon.
'rom 3 per cent to 5 par cent he children of school age have aring difficulty. The prob-is a serious one,” Kallen-said.
ecause leading ear special-tell us that a majority of ren with hearing loss can be * if they are founcl in time,” enbaugh said. “Our greatest rt should be placed on early ction of hearing impairments.
is where Doctor Tolan and el the parents come in.”
telephone much as Sophocles uses his chorus in “Electra.” As a means of explaining what has happened before the curtain rises, or the action which occurs elsewhere than on the stage..
Edith Anderson in Title Role
The chorus leader in “Electra” will be Edith Anderson, who played the wife in “Death of a Salesman” last season. Others in the cast are Pat Madgewick,
Jeanne Brachman, Barbara Bull, Janet Curry, Sue Evans, Gay Gadbois, Joy Lundwell, Anita de Sanctic, Magdalene Senn and Betty Lou Soden.
Tickets for the play, which will run five days, are on sale at the University Ticket Office in the Student Union. Orchestra seats are $1, balcony seats are 50 cents, and admission is free to activity book holders.
ELECTRA FYING—According to the press agent of the Production of Electra, hitting the Bovard boards next week, these two cuties from the Electra chorus were working backstage on the set when the photographer caught them.
VOTE FRAUD—Investigator Bo Jansen has just finished his stirring report in which he recommended a 10-day investigation extension. Don Daves, TRG candidate for president, with cig hanging from mouth, seems to be wondering whether he really got cheated. Marguerite Cooper, senatorial candidate, appears
—DT Photo by Don Desfor
to be saying a prayer that the motion will carry. Meanwhile the filled room roars with applause and cheers. Bob Wallach, with a determined look, tries to get recognition from President Clendening in order to talk down the motion. Later Wallach voted in favor of the extension. But . . .
. . . not all students were enthused about Jansen's recommendation, particularly hard working Chuck McClure, election commissioner. While the heated harranging goes on all about him, McClure, who lost much sleep while' super* vising the vote counting, catches up on a few winks.
Peak Club Dinner To Feature Slides
The mountain climbers of the Trojan Peak Club will mount the stairs of the Commons cafeteria to hold their second annual dinner at 6’ p.m. tomorrow.
Ralph Drummond, past president of the club and an SC alumnus of the Law School and business administration, will the
Jansen Probers Plan Thorough Hunt for Fraud
“With the 10-day extension of the elections investigation,” said Bo Jansen, colorful politico who drew numerous rounds of applause with his oratory in yesterday’s heated Senate meeting, “we will have definite grounds and reasons whether to accept or reject the disputed ASSC election results.”
Jansen said that with the addition of 20 members to the committee which is investigating the elections, “a complete analysis can be made. I have no idea wnat the outcome will be, but thQ samplings of ballots investigated show proof of illegal tactics. Just how serious the tampering has been, we don’t know . . . but we’re going to find out.”
The committee plans a complete check into the election.
Elections Commissioner Chuck McClure said that he would work 100 per cent in the investigation. He was the lone disenter on the committee’s recommendation to the Senate to allow for the 10-day extension. Other than that, McClure, who was admittedly and visibly fatigued with the long hours he has spent since the elections began, had “no comment.”
by Paul Wasserman
After two and one-half hours of bitter debate, which saw party lines crossed and long friendships broken, the Senate yesterday afternoon voted to extend for 10 more days the investigation of the committee looking into the frauds of last week’s student body elections. The vote was 20 in favor, 12 against, and 1 abstention. |
In a report to the Senate, the investigation committe asked that their investigation be continued for 10 more days because “we ju6t had time to touch the bare I surface of all the facts in the case.”
All student body run-off elec- | tions have thus been postponed indefinitely.
The Senate also approved these proposals of the committee, which were introduced as one motion:
1—That a minimum of 20 “thoroughly reliable’’ persons be provided to assist the committee.
2—That the committee be empowered to investigate all aspects of the election and be provided with the “means” with which this must be accomplished.
3—That “the present check on registration cards be continued,”
and that “they be checked ®0 JANSEN
against the cards in the Business . . gets 10 days
Office.”
4—That individual contact be made with those students who are supposed to have voted to verify this fact.
5—That a handwriting expert be retained to certify the authenticity of registration signatures.
6—That a determined effort be made to discover those persons responsible for illegal election procedures.
7—And that tha committee be auhorized to employ the assistance of outside agencies.
The committee also asked that if these proposals were not accepted, the senate should then “approve new student body elections in the fall of 1954’.’ and provide a caretaker government until that election is approved.
. The investigation committee was made up of Bo Jansen, chairman, the captain of the debate squad; Bette Dobkin, independent womens’ representative; Ann Willson, Mortar Board president; Joan Vasseur, AWS president; and Chuck McClure, election commissioner.
All but McClure, who proposed that the elections be approved as they now stand, concurred in the report.
Campus “Elder-Statesman” Bo Jansen, who spok^ for the committee majority wa easily the “star” of the meeting and literally captivated the Senate chamber with his speech.
“The good name and self-respect of all of us and our university
are the things at stake today,” he said.
“What reflects on us reflects on SC,” he added, saying that “Campus politicians are a dime a dozen—ex-politicians even’ cheaper. Then years from now no one will remember who held what office, but they will remember if we had any honor.”
He emphasized quite strongly that this was the thing “I have
been working at for four years” and told the Senate that the issue
was between “ethics or expediency.”
At this point the Senate chamber was permeated by sustained and thunderous applause and Jansen was quite visibly moved.
Sophomore Class President Bob Wallach then got up and told the Senate that “for 7 years—both in public school and here—I have had the task of following Bo’s speeches and its tough, but we should not be swayed by oratory—only by the facts.”
“And the facts are,” Wallach said, “the candidates who won have already been put under the ‘shadow of doubt’ and 10 more days of investigations won’t solve anything—they’ll just put more suspicion on admittedly innocent people.”
(Continued on Page 4)
be the toastmaster for the 1.90 a plate luncheon, Noble Trenham, TPC president said.
E. Leslie Eames, DDS, will present color photos and slides of Ten Busy Days in Old Mexico.” Don McGeein, member of. the Sierra Club for 25 years, and E. Parker Severson, executive committee of the Southern California Sierra Club, will show koda-chrome slides and present commentaries on the Sierras, Mt. Whitney, Trojan Peak, Mt. Rainier, Glacier Park, Montana Peak, and climbs of Mexican peaks.
George Harr, past chairman of the rock climbing section of the Southern California chapter of the Sierra Club, will show a display of rock climbing equipment The Trojan Peak Club was organized in 1951 after two Trojans scaled the 13,968 foot mountain five miles north of Mt. Whitney and officially named it “Trojan Peak.”
Reservations for the luncheon can be made by telephoning Richmond 2311, extension 346.
Official
Notice
All students graduating in June, 1954, whose final examinations in upper division or graduate courses are scheduled for June 7, 8, 9, or 10, will take those examinations at the time of the last class meeting prior to May 29. Graduating students, if any, registered in lower division courses will take those final examinations prior to May 29 at a time to be arranged with the instructor. A. S. Raubenheimer Educational Vice-President
'Boy President' Praises Senate Elections Meet
SC’s “president for a day,” Pat Humphreys, praised highly the ASSC Senate in yesterday’s controversial elections meeting. Humphreys, who substituted for SC President Fred D. Fagg Jr, during the annual Boys Day in Government, is a student at Los Angeles High School.
Humphreys was impressed with the “outstanding speeches—especially those of Bo Jansen and Bob Wallach.”
President Fagg greeted the “boy president” yesterday morning and Student Activities Adviser Harry Nelson arranged a complete tour of the campus for him. Humphreys raet Clendening and attended the lengthy Senate meeting.
Humphreys is president of Star and Crescent at Los Angeles High, plays football, and is a musician in the school band.
FASHION
TYPICAL
SHOW TO UNVEIL BRIDAL GOWN' *
'Colonel' Voting To Begin Today
Voting will begin today in Air ROTC classes for the selection of an Honorary Colonel to preside over the Military Ball Friday at the Beverly Hills Hotel.
In the queen race are Mary Coate, Barbara Gilbert, Marilyn Hudson, Sandy Leonard and Joan Vasseur,
A replica of the “most typical 20th centu ry bridal gown” will be unveiled at the School of Commerce fashion show tomorrow at 3 p.m. in the YWCA.
Designed by William Cahill, the original Cahill “Cameo” gown was selected by the Philadelphia Museum as the most typical we dding gown of the century and added to its clothes display. The gown will be presented in the first act of the program. The act is entitled “A Dream, a Girl, a Dress” and will feature Elouise Wohlwend modeling the gown.
Miss Wohlwend is a student in marketing III, one of the classes producing the style show
According to Miss Wohlwend, the bridal dress is light pink in color and is made of satin. The gown has a jewel inset cuffed bodice and a nylon lace veil attached to a Juliet cap edged in seed pearls. It has a short train.
Patronesses include Mes. Laurence Lockley, J. George Robinson,
Robert R. Dockson, Richard Mead, Franklin Gilchrist, Helen Ratchford, Charles Whitlow, and Albert S. Raubenheimer.
The show, entitled “Stop! Your Fashion’s Showing,” will be different in plan from the ordinary fashion show. All display tables are to be Rouped informally to allow persons to serve themselves refreshments throughout the 6how. Usually refreshments are served only during intermission.
More than 150 students from class in the fundamentals of fashion, merchandise information, textiles, non-textiles, advertising, copywriting and production, and retailing are presenting the show to raise funds for Troy Camp.
Alpha Delta Sigma, men’s advertising fraternity, and Gamma Alphi Chi, women’s advertising sorority, are also cooperating in the production of the program.
Tickets, which 6ell for 50 cents, may be purchased either from students in any of the sponsoring classes or at the door.
—iTT Photo by uon uwiu.
FASHION SHOW—In the scenic setting of the Mudd Memorial Hall patio, marketing student Elouise Wohlwend models an original William Cahill wedding gown to be unveiled at the School of Commerce fashion show at 3 p.m. tomorrow in the YWCA.

lection Returns Still Unaccepted; enators Continue Fraud Search
Investigators Get 10-Day Extension
0
I. XLV
Los Angeles, Calif., Wednesday, May 5, 1954
No. 125
hanks Chosen Brawl aster of Ceremonies
Ken Shanks, instructor in public speaking, has been seated by the Soph-Frosh Day entertainment committee to t as master of ceremonies of the stage show Friday after-on at the Oceanhouse.
‘Ken Shanks is one of the funniest men on campus and ould really liven up the pro-am we’ve planned for Soph-sh Day,” Sally Ackles, enter-ment co-chairman said, thanks had previously acted as iter of ceremonies of the spe-“End of an Era” program ?brating the closing of Univer-Avenue.
addition to his emcee chores, mks will act as chaperone g with Harry Nelson, student vit.ies adviser, and Norman ms, instructor in economics.
?side the show there’ll be jity of other things to see and at Frosh-Soph Day,” Julius th freshman co-chairman of day, said.
tudents will be able to take ant.ige of a heated swimming 1 and a private white-sand :h. Locker facilities are avail-at no extra charge.”
■ccording to Smith, volleyball Irts and ping-pong tables are available for sports enthus-
tudents buying tickets to the t will also be entitled to free portation to and from Oce-ouse,” Dennis Hopper, sopho-e co-chairman, said.
"Te’ve arranged for a car pool set up as an added conveni-Cars will be parked at the er of 36th Street and Univer-Avenue. The procession will 'e for Oceanhouse at 12:45
or persons who drive to the ta Monica resort hotel, there be free parking in the giant immediately adjacent to the anhouse.
One more thing,” Hopper ad-
KEN SHANKS
.... funniest man
ded, “Deluxe hamburgers, hot dogs and soft drinks will be sold at wholesale prices. Prices will be so reasonable that every one should be able to afford all the food they want.”
Tickets, which sell for $1, can be purchased from any Freshman or Sophomore Council member or at the ticket booth in front of Student Union or at the door.
The IFC track preliminaries will begin at noon Friday, Dr. Tilman Hall, FRA director, announced yesterday.
The time change was made to allow sophomore and freshman athletes to compete in the Soph-Frosh “brawl.”
Swivel Hips Han to Wiggle At Hula Hop
Want to see the starting fullback of the 1953 Trojan football team do the hula?
Harold Han will demonstrate that he is just as good at swiveling his hips as snaking through the line at Friday night’s Hula Hop to be held in the Student Lounge of SU at 8 p.m.
The dance is being sponsored by the Chinese Students Club.
Casual sport attire will be appropriate to the hop.
Price of admission is 75 cents for stags, 25 cents for stagettes and $1 for couples.
Matlock Seeks Seniors to Vie For Prom Title
“Pretty women have been avoiding me all this week,” Mark Matlock sobbed, “and even my best friends won’t tell me why.” Matlock, chairman of the Senior Prom Queen Contest, has been chasing women all week but has capght only three for contestants.
“Friday is absolutely the last day women can enter,” cried Mattock, “I don’t know why I’m so unpopular. You’d think that every senior woman would want to be prom queen.”
Senior coeds whc want to help Mattock should submit a five by seven or larger photo to 215 SU by Friday.
ACGERATED DANCE STYLE
Traditional Greek Chorus Line To Be Utilized in Electra'
Even the Greeks had chorus Is. The routines were different t the basic idea was present.
audiences will realize this -en “Eiectra” opens at Bovard, y 11.
Against a musical background primitive instruments, the eek chorus moved in a dance tion which was the forerun-[r of our “modern” dance. Their iaggerated stylization was ne-~sary because of the distance :ween audience and stage. Impress Moral of Play ey served also to impress moral of the play, and their er was cdnfidant of the pro-nist, in this case, Electra. e modern playwright uses the
earing Head eaks Here
r. Thomas L. Toland. presi-of the American Hearing ety and a top authority on ing defects, will be the fea-speakcr at a Hearing luncheon today in the Foy-f Town and Gown, octor Tolan will talk on the rtance of parents watching r children for signs of loss of ing, according to S. R. Kal-~ugh, president of the Hear-Center, who is sponsoring the heon.
'rom 3 per cent to 5 par cent he children of school age have aring difficulty. The prob-is a serious one,” Kallen-said.
ecause leading ear special-tell us that a majority of ren with hearing loss can be * if they are founcl in time,” enbaugh said. “Our greatest rt should be placed on early ction of hearing impairments.
is where Doctor Tolan and el the parents come in.”
telephone much as Sophocles uses his chorus in “Electra.” As a means of explaining what has happened before the curtain rises, or the action which occurs elsewhere than on the stage..
Edith Anderson in Title Role
The chorus leader in “Electra” will be Edith Anderson, who played the wife in “Death of a Salesman” last season. Others in the cast are Pat Madgewick,
Jeanne Brachman, Barbara Bull, Janet Curry, Sue Evans, Gay Gadbois, Joy Lundwell, Anita de Sanctic, Magdalene Senn and Betty Lou Soden.
Tickets for the play, which will run five days, are on sale at the University Ticket Office in the Student Union. Orchestra seats are $1, balcony seats are 50 cents, and admission is free to activity book holders.
ELECTRA FYING—According to the press agent of the Production of Electra, hitting the Bovard boards next week, these two cuties from the Electra chorus were working backstage on the set when the photographer caught them.
VOTE FRAUD—Investigator Bo Jansen has just finished his stirring report in which he recommended a 10-day investigation extension. Don Daves, TRG candidate for president, with cig hanging from mouth, seems to be wondering whether he really got cheated. Marguerite Cooper, senatorial candidate, appears
—DT Photo by Don Desfor
to be saying a prayer that the motion will carry. Meanwhile the filled room roars with applause and cheers. Bob Wallach, with a determined look, tries to get recognition from President Clendening in order to talk down the motion. Later Wallach voted in favor of the extension. But . . .
. . . not all students were enthused about Jansen's recommendation, particularly hard working Chuck McClure, election commissioner. While the heated harranging goes on all about him, McClure, who lost much sleep while' super* vising the vote counting, catches up on a few winks.
Peak Club Dinner To Feature Slides
The mountain climbers of the Trojan Peak Club will mount the stairs of the Commons cafeteria to hold their second annual dinner at 6’ p.m. tomorrow.
Ralph Drummond, past president of the club and an SC alumnus of the Law School and business administration, will the
Jansen Probers Plan Thorough Hunt for Fraud
“With the 10-day extension of the elections investigation,” said Bo Jansen, colorful politico who drew numerous rounds of applause with his oratory in yesterday’s heated Senate meeting, “we will have definite grounds and reasons whether to accept or reject the disputed ASSC election results.”
Jansen said that with the addition of 20 members to the committee which is investigating the elections, “a complete analysis can be made. I have no idea wnat the outcome will be, but thQ samplings of ballots investigated show proof of illegal tactics. Just how serious the tampering has been, we don’t know . . . but we’re going to find out.”
The committee plans a complete check into the election.
Elections Commissioner Chuck McClure said that he would work 100 per cent in the investigation. He was the lone disenter on the committee’s recommendation to the Senate to allow for the 10-day extension. Other than that, McClure, who was admittedly and visibly fatigued with the long hours he has spent since the elections began, had “no comment.”
by Paul Wasserman
After two and one-half hours of bitter debate, which saw party lines crossed and long friendships broken, the Senate yesterday afternoon voted to extend for 10 more days the investigation of the committee looking into the frauds of last week’s student body elections. The vote was 20 in favor, 12 against, and 1 abstention. |
In a report to the Senate, the investigation committe asked that their investigation be continued for 10 more days because “we ju6t had time to touch the bare I surface of all the facts in the case.”
All student body run-off elec- | tions have thus been postponed indefinitely.
The Senate also approved these proposals of the committee, which were introduced as one motion:
1—That a minimum of 20 “thoroughly reliable’’ persons be provided to assist the committee.
2—That the committee be empowered to investigate all aspects of the election and be provided with the “means” with which this must be accomplished.
3—That “the present check on registration cards be continued,”
and that “they be checked ®0 JANSEN
against the cards in the Business . . gets 10 days
Office.”
4—That individual contact be made with those students who are supposed to have voted to verify this fact.
5—That a handwriting expert be retained to certify the authenticity of registration signatures.
6—That a determined effort be made to discover those persons responsible for illegal election procedures.
7—And that tha committee be auhorized to employ the assistance of outside agencies.
The committee also asked that if these proposals were not accepted, the senate should then “approve new student body elections in the fall of 1954’.’ and provide a caretaker government until that election is approved.
. The investigation committee was made up of Bo Jansen, chairman, the captain of the debate squad; Bette Dobkin, independent womens’ representative; Ann Willson, Mortar Board president; Joan Vasseur, AWS president; and Chuck McClure, election commissioner.
All but McClure, who proposed that the elections be approved as they now stand, concurred in the report.
Campus “Elder-Statesman” Bo Jansen, who spok^ for the committee majority wa easily the “star” of the meeting and literally captivated the Senate chamber with his speech.
“The good name and self-respect of all of us and our university
are the things at stake today,” he said.
“What reflects on us reflects on SC,” he added, saying that “Campus politicians are a dime a dozen—ex-politicians even’ cheaper. Then years from now no one will remember who held what office, but they will remember if we had any honor.”
He emphasized quite strongly that this was the thing “I have
been working at for four years” and told the Senate that the issue
was between “ethics or expediency.”
At this point the Senate chamber was permeated by sustained and thunderous applause and Jansen was quite visibly moved.
Sophomore Class President Bob Wallach then got up and told the Senate that “for 7 years—both in public school and here—I have had the task of following Bo’s speeches and its tough, but we should not be swayed by oratory—only by the facts.”
“And the facts are,” Wallach said, “the candidates who won have already been put under the ‘shadow of doubt’ and 10 more days of investigations won’t solve anything—they’ll just put more suspicion on admittedly innocent people.”
(Continued on Page 4)
be the toastmaster for the 1.90 a plate luncheon, Noble Trenham, TPC president said.
E. Leslie Eames, DDS, will present color photos and slides of Ten Busy Days in Old Mexico.” Don McGeein, member of. the Sierra Club for 25 years, and E. Parker Severson, executive committee of the Southern California Sierra Club, will show koda-chrome slides and present commentaries on the Sierras, Mt. Whitney, Trojan Peak, Mt. Rainier, Glacier Park, Montana Peak, and climbs of Mexican peaks.
George Harr, past chairman of the rock climbing section of the Southern California chapter of the Sierra Club, will show a display of rock climbing equipment The Trojan Peak Club was organized in 1951 after two Trojans scaled the 13,968 foot mountain five miles north of Mt. Whitney and officially named it “Trojan Peak.”
Reservations for the luncheon can be made by telephoning Richmond 2311, extension 346.
Official
Notice
All students graduating in June, 1954, whose final examinations in upper division or graduate courses are scheduled for June 7, 8, 9, or 10, will take those examinations at the time of the last class meeting prior to May 29. Graduating students, if any, registered in lower division courses will take those final examinations prior to May 29 at a time to be arranged with the instructor. A. S. Raubenheimer Educational Vice-President
'Boy President' Praises Senate Elections Meet
SC’s “president for a day,” Pat Humphreys, praised highly the ASSC Senate in yesterday’s controversial elections meeting. Humphreys, who substituted for SC President Fred D. Fagg Jr, during the annual Boys Day in Government, is a student at Los Angeles High School.
Humphreys was impressed with the “outstanding speeches—especially those of Bo Jansen and Bob Wallach.”
President Fagg greeted the “boy president” yesterday morning and Student Activities Adviser Harry Nelson arranged a complete tour of the campus for him. Humphreys raet Clendening and attended the lengthy Senate meeting.
Humphreys is president of Star and Crescent at Los Angeles High, plays football, and is a musician in the school band.
FASHION
TYPICAL
SHOW TO UNVEIL BRIDAL GOWN' *
'Colonel' Voting To Begin Today
Voting will begin today in Air ROTC classes for the selection of an Honorary Colonel to preside over the Military Ball Friday at the Beverly Hills Hotel.
In the queen race are Mary Coate, Barbara Gilbert, Marilyn Hudson, Sandy Leonard and Joan Vasseur,
A replica of the “most typical 20th centu ry bridal gown” will be unveiled at the School of Commerce fashion show tomorrow at 3 p.m. in the YWCA.
Designed by William Cahill, the original Cahill “Cameo” gown was selected by the Philadelphia Museum as the most typical we dding gown of the century and added to its clothes display. The gown will be presented in the first act of the program. The act is entitled “A Dream, a Girl, a Dress” and will feature Elouise Wohlwend modeling the gown.
Miss Wohlwend is a student in marketing III, one of the classes producing the style show
According to Miss Wohlwend, the bridal dress is light pink in color and is made of satin. The gown has a jewel inset cuffed bodice and a nylon lace veil attached to a Juliet cap edged in seed pearls. It has a short train.
Patronesses include Mes. Laurence Lockley, J. George Robinson,
Robert R. Dockson, Richard Mead, Franklin Gilchrist, Helen Ratchford, Charles Whitlow, and Albert S. Raubenheimer.
The show, entitled “Stop! Your Fashion’s Showing,” will be different in plan from the ordinary fashion show. All display tables are to be Rouped informally to allow persons to serve themselves refreshments throughout the 6how. Usually refreshments are served only during intermission.
More than 150 students from class in the fundamentals of fashion, merchandise information, textiles, non-textiles, advertising, copywriting and production, and retailing are presenting the show to raise funds for Troy Camp.
Alpha Delta Sigma, men’s advertising fraternity, and Gamma Alphi Chi, women’s advertising sorority, are also cooperating in the production of the program.
Tickets, which 6ell for 50 cents, may be purchased either from students in any of the sponsoring classes or at the door.
—iTT Photo by uon uwiu.
FASHION SHOW—In the scenic setting of the Mudd Memorial Hall patio, marketing student Elouise Wohlwend models an original William Cahill wedding gown to be unveiled at the School of Commerce fashion show at 3 p.m. tomorrow in the YWCA.